2023-04-26T10:11:54Z
2023-04-26T10:11:54Z
2019-06-04
2023-04-26T10:11:54Z
The relationships of crustaceans and hexapods (Pancrustacea) have been much discussed and partially elucidated following the emergence of phylogenomic data sets. However, major uncertainties still remain regarding the position of iconic taxa such as Branchiopoda, Copepoda, Remipedia, and Cephalocarida, and the sister group relationship of hexapods. We assembled the most taxon-rich phylogenomic pancrustacean data set to date and analyzed it using a variety of methodological approaches. We prioritized low levels of missing data and found that some clades were consistently recovered independently of the analytical approach used. These include, for example, Oligostraca and Altocrustacea. Substantial support was also found for Allotriocarida, with Remipedia as the sister of Hexapoda (i.e., Labiocarida), and Branchiopoda as the sister of Labiocarida, a clade that we name Athalassocarida (='nonmarine shrimps'). Within Allotriocarida, Cephalocarida was found as the sister of Athalassocarida. Finally, moderate support was found for Hexanauplia (Copepoda as sister to Thecostraca) in alliance with Malacostraca. Mapping key crustacean tagmosis patterns and developmental characters across the revised phylogeny suggests that the ancestral pancrustacean was relatively short-bodied, with extreme body elongation and anamorphic development emerging later in pancrustacean evolution.
Article
Published version
English
Crustacis; Evolució molecular; Crustacea; Molecular evolution
Oxford University Press
Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1093/gbe/evz097
Genome Biology and Evolution, 2019, vol. 11, num. 8, p. 2055-2070
https://doi.org/10.1093/gbe/evz097
cc-by-nc (c) Lozano Fernandez, Jesus et al., 2019
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/